I focus with the lens wide open, then usually stop down two or three stops, depending on the lens, and the light. I balance the depth of field I see in the viewfinder with the shutter speed, ensuring I don’t go too slow and end up with camera shake.

Occasionally I’ll have to move my shoulder strap because it’s slipped down a little. Um, that’s really about all I adjust once the film is loaded.

Once the film is processed and scanned to CD, I just browse through and discard any that I don’t like or don’t think work. Then I’ll do it again, and maybe one more time, until I’m left with just the best. This might only be one or two shots per roll, a great hit rate for me is say six shots.

Processing is non-existent, I let the lab take care of it, then just use the scans on the CD they provide. This is for two reasons. Firstly because I tried scanning my own film for a few months and it took a crazy amount of time I didn’t want to spend on it. Second, I just like the unpredictability of film, and the excitement of getting the scans back and not knowing which shots (if any!) have turned out well and will put a smile on my face.

You can see that my film shooting process is considerably more straightforward than shooting digital.

It genuinely surprised me how little I had to write for this post.

And yet it is this simplicity that has hugely influenced my digital shooting, and helped me evolve it to where it is now.

When I first started shooting film it felt a whole other world to what I thought digital was.

But the experience of shooting film for around five years has helped me understand what is most important to me about photography overall, and how these days I can shape my digital experience to be very close – in both the experience and the final results – to the one I discovered and fell in love with with film.

Of course I’ve also realised that shooting digital doesn’t mean having to use an ugly bloated plasticky everything auto body with an equally horribly plasticky everything auto zoom lens.

I’ve not given up on film, but I have far less a need for it now.

Who knows where I’ll be a year from now, but I’m pretty sure I’ll still have at least a handful of Takumars and a Pentax body or two.

How do you simplify your film photography process?

Please let us know in the comments below.

Thanks for reading. Please share this post with others you feel will enjoy it too.

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12 thoughts on “How I Keep Photography Simple (Film Edition)”

Interesting that you set the exposure to be a little overexposed. I have found that – film and digital – I like to underexpose by a bit. That’s maybe because I mostly do street photography, which I think suits the moodier feel especially on B&W film.

I also do one small adjustment when I get the photos scanned before I put them online, which is to change the gamma correction setting so it doesn’t look all washed out. I don’t mind doing that too much, doing a little editing like that helps you look more closely at your own images.

Hi Sam, thanks for your thoughts. My reasons for overexposing are mainly because I use colour negative film most of the time, and the ones I use are all +3/-1 in latitude.

Colour film underexposed doesn’t look great for my tastes – grainy, washed out and dull. So by leaning toward overexposure with these films I’m more likely to get in the middle of the film’s latitude. Plus a touch of overexposure tends to give slightly more saturated colours with these films – something else I like about the look of film.

I continue to struggle with simplification. I am triangulating on the systems I will lean on for real work, but I still really enjoy just shooting a new-to=me camera just to experience it. So I usually have two or three of those sitting here with film in them. I’ve liked to do this since I was a boy and I don’t see it letting up anytime soon!

I do know exactly what you mean about trying a new (old) camera just for the experience and challenge of it. I used to do it all the time! Especially with compact cameras. I think now I’m largely over that phase in my photography. I do still have it to some extent with lenses, but my wishlist now is very small, maybe three or four lenses.

If that’s what you enjoy, then why not continue?

Somehow for me the idea of having just one fairly small kit of cameras is now more appealing than having/trying dozens a year. Kind of feels like settling down with one person after years of casual dating!

I use the word triangulating very loosely. I just mean that I am in the process of figuring out which systems I’m going to get behind.

Oh yes, absolutely – I’ll keep doing what I like! The only reason there’s any level of hesitation here is that holy cow do I not have space for more cameras! And while buying them on eBay is easy, selling them again on eBay is not and I tend to put it off.

Yeh that was an influencing factor for me in settling on just Pentax. I don’t like clutter generally, and having cameras and lenses start to spill over into other areas in my room just started to drive me crazy.

It’s just about manageable now, but I could still do with purging a little more!

Also I just don’t like having stuff I’m not using, and it just gathering dust. I want all my photographic kit to be in constant rotation and getting a regular workout.

[…] the need for further uploading, processing, etc. Keeping processing simple is vital for me with film or digital. With the iPhone I just use the images as they come out of the phone (granted I have a […]